Academic literature on the topic 'Failed marriage'

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Journal articles on the topic "Failed marriage"

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Davies, John K. "Universities and research: A failed marriage?" Tertiary Education and Management 4, no. 2 (1998): 133–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13583883.1998.9966955.

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Nelkin, Dorothy. "The Science Wars: Responses to a Marriage Failed." Social Text, no. 46/47 (1996): 93. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/466846.

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Laplante, Benoît. "From France to the Church: The Generalization of Parish Registers in the Catholic Countries." Journal of Family History 44, no. 1 (2018): 24–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0363199018806501.

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The generalization of the registration of baptism and marriage in the Catholic countries is shown to be the result of a process in which France used the authority of the Council of Trent to impose on the whole Church a system of public registration it had started to implement through temporal law at home in 1539, so that the clerics in charge of the registration be subject to canonical penalties if they failed to comply. The registration of baptism and marriage was integrated into the Decree on the Reformation of Marriage that France maneuvered to impose on the Church to curb clandestine marriages which had dire effects on estate planning in France, given the peculiarities of its inheritance and matrimonial law.
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Bushnell, John. "Did Serf Owners Control Serf Marriage? Orlov Serfs and Their Neighbors, 1773-1861." Slavic Review 52, no. 3 (1993): 419–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2499717.

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Historians of the Russian peasantry hold almost unanimously that serfowners routinely intervened in serf marriage: that they generally forbade serf women to leave the estate through marriage or marry at all without permission, commanded serfs to marry young, made compulsory matches when their serfs failed to marry on schedule, and otherwise prevented serfs from exercising free choice in marriage. Equally common is the assumption that the nobles’ interest in serf marriage was the multiplication of human property and the number of duespaying labor units, i.e., married couples. The one exception is Steven Hoch, who found that on the Gagarin estate of Petrovskoe, Tambov province, managers never intervened, at least in first marriages. They never had to, Hoch argues, because the heads of peasant households shared the owners’ interest in early and universal marriage. That was because estate managers allocated land, the only significant economic resource, to married couples on an egalitarian basis. Even Hoch accepts the standard view that, on other estates where different socioeconomic conditions held, estate authorities did have to intervene to ensure that serfs married early and universally.
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Schmid, Stefan, and Andrea Daniel. "Telia-a Swedish-Finnish marriage after a failed Norwegian courtship." Thunderbird International Business Review 51, no. 3 (2009): 297–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/tie.20266.

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Mariani, Giulia. "Failed and successful attempts at institutional change: the battle for marriage equality in the United States." European Political Science Review 12, no. 2 (2020): 255–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1755773920000090.

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AbstractBy focusing on the legislative process underpinning marriage equality in the American states, this article identifies the combinations of conditions under which attempts at institutional displacement succeed or fail. Hitherto, few scholarly works have empirically examined displacement and whether, and how, actors can preserve institutional stability in the face of organized efforts to change institutions. Taking causal complexity into account, the analytical model factors in the resources of both change and status quo actors as well as the political context that enables or constrains their strategies. The results of the comparative analysis show that states have followed different paths to the displacement of heterosexual marriage in favor of marriage equality. Yet, most crucially, the findings pinpoint that the inclusion of religious exemption clauses is a condition sine qua non for marriage equality laws to be effectively passed, thus challenging the widely accepted notion that morality policies are foreign to compromise.
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Liabakh, L., and R. Martseniuk. "FAILED MARRIAGE: UNKNOWN SCENES OF V. FRANKO AND YU. KOSACH LIFES." Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. History, no. 133 (2017): 40–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/1728-2640.2017.133.2.09.

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Burnard, T. "A Failed Settler Society: Marriage and Demographic Failure in Early Jamaica." Journal of Social History 28, no. 1 (1994): 63–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jsh/28.1.63.

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Wineberg, Howard. "The Association Between Having a Failed Marital Reconciliation in the First Marriage and Dissolution of the Second Marriage." Journal of Divorce & Remarriage 27, no. 3-4 (1997): 39–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j087v27n03_03.

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Abeyasekera, Asha L. "“Living for others”: Narrating agency in the context of failed marriages and singleness in urban Sri Lanka." Feminism & Psychology 27, no. 4 (2017): 427–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959353517716951.

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Marriage is a cultural imperative in Sri Lanka and is constructed as the principal source of personal fulfilment for women. This paper critically examines through two case studies – a never-married woman and a woman in a “failed” marriage – how women from older generations narrate their life histories using culturally coherent repertoires. By deconstructing the subject positions of the “long-suffering wife”, the “devoted mother”, and the “selfless woman”, I reveal the spaces for manoeuvre these women create to experience well-being and exercise agency outside of the culture’s “hegemonic narrative” of successful marriage and maternity. Using the life history narratives I challenge the tendency to imagine older women’s lives as more constrained and illustrate the ways in which equivocal narratives about independence and self-sacrifice, about freedom and suffering simultaneously conceal agency while allowing non-normative ways of being.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Failed marriage"

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Krug, Mark Jonathan. "Men who fail a redemptive journey /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2006. http://www.tren.com/search.cfm?p068-0595.

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Blum, Francelle L. "When marriages fail: Divorce in nineteenth-century Texas." Thesis, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1911/22242.

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Divorce in nineteenth-century Texas was rooted in social customs as much as law, with class, gender, and race serving as strong influences on marital experiences and decisions to divorce. Legal divorce took place primarily at the local level, with the option of appeal to the Texas Supreme Court. Under Mexican rule, Anglo settlers had no option for divorce, and marital status was itself often uncertain, resulting in the practice of bond marriage (marriage by contract). For a short time under the Republic of Texas, a few Texans sought legislative divorce. However, judicial divorce soon became the standard practice and remained so throughout the century. This study is based on a reading of 1,578 local divorce cases from Harrison and Washington Counties. An extensive database including all available information on the litigants of each case provides insight into the influences of class, race, gender, kinship, and community on divorce. Although culturally very southern, Texas was also a western frontier and a community-property state. A combination of property protections based on Spanish law, frontier attitudes, and southern paternalism assured Texas women of a relatively high legal status. The Texas divorce law of 1841 remained intact throughout the nineteenth century with only minor changes. With remarkable legal persistence, social factors were the most evident influences on marital expectations and divorce. Chapters are laid out chronologically. Chapter One examines the statutory context of Texas divorce. Chapter Two addresses marital dissolution in the earliest phase of Anglo settlement and under the Republic of Texas, with an emphasis on frontier circumstances and changing political identities. Chapter Three examines divorce under antebellum statehood with an eye toward social hierarchy. Chapter Four discusses the impact of the Civil War and the actions of divorce seekers in postwar Texas, with emphasis on kinship and community influences as well as changing expectations for marriage. Chapter Five deals with the unique experiences of African American divorce seekers in Texas after 1865.
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Books on the topic "Failed marriage"

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Pang, Ki-su. Sŏnggong han ihon silpʻae han kyŏrhon =: Succeed divorce, failed marriage. Kyemyŏngsa, 2006.

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Hager, Kelly. Dickens and the rise of divorce: The failed-marriage plot and the novel tradition. Ashgate, 2010.

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Dickens and the rise of divorce: The failed-marriage plot and the novel tradition. Ashgate, 2010.

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The bishop or the King: How the Anglican Church of Canada has failed to defend its King. Essence Pub., 2009.

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Corcoran, Ron. THE BISHOP OR THE KING: How The Anglican Church of Canada Has Failed To Defend Its King (DVD included). Essence Publishing, 2009.

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Carole, Mortimer. Failed Marriage. Harlequin Enterprises, Limited, 2019.

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Carole, Mortimer. Failed Marriage. Harlequin Mills & Boon, Limited, 2015.

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Has Marriage For Love Failed. Polity Press, 2013.

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Bruckner, Pascal. Has Marriage for Love Failed? Polity Press, 2013.

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Bruckner, Pascal. Has Marriage for Love Failed? Polity Press, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Failed marriage"

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Fosse, Magdalena J. "In Love Versus in life: Has Marriage for Love Failed?" In The Many Faces of Polyamory. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315145969-2-4.

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Zein, Rand El. "Rethinking the Relationship Between Child Marriage and Failed Infrastructure During the Syrian Conflict: A Discourse Analysis of Arab Television News." In geschlecht_transkulturell. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-30263-4_17.

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Sege, Duan. "A Failed “Marriage”: The Attitude of the Peasants and the Government Toward the First Stage of Collectivisation in the Preov Region (1949–1953)." In Rooms for Manoeuvre. V&R unipress, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737013369.95.

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"The Science Wars: Responses to a Marriage Failed." In Science Wars. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780822397977-007.

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Fredette, Allison Dorothy. "Torn Apart." In Marriage on the Border. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813179155.003.0006.

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This chapter explores the impact of the Civil War on divorce in the postwar period. As in other parts of the United States, the Civil War had a profound impact on the psyche and emotions of the people involved, and years of distance and separation and battlefield trauma led to the breakdown of many relationships. The situation in Kentucky and West Virginia was exacerbated by two particular circumstances: the establishment of friendlier divorce laws in the antebellum era and the embrace of domesticity and mutuality before and during the conflict. Hastily arranged marriages and the flexibility to more easily end those relationships when they failed, led to a rash of divorces in the border South in the years following the war.
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Lipscomb, Suzannah. "The Trials of Marriage." In The Voices of Nimes. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198797661.003.0008.

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Section 1 of this chapter considers the experience of marriage breakdown among ordinary people. It examines the causes of marital disharmony, revealing gender ideals and how spouses failed to meet them, and women’s strategies when faced with marital conflict. It considers the incidence of domestic violence, and the circumstances in which it became sufficiently public, excessive, or unjustified to cause comment and denunciation. It charts how few reports were made by battered women themselves, and consistory’s limited sympathy for such wives. Section 2 examines adultery. Cases of male adultery were often brought to light by gossip and eyewitness denunciations. The consistories also provide evidence of women’s reactions to their husbands’ infidelity, within and outside the consistory. On female adultery, the chapter explores men’s anxiety about being known to be cuckolded, and husbands’ reports of adultery nonetheless; it also looks at the allegations made by neighbours and the community, and women’s strategies in response to accusation.
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"Contextualizing the Failed-Marriage Plot: Ian Watt, the Domestic Novel, and the Law of Marriage." In Dickens and the Rise of Divorce. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315577050-4.

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"Chapter 6. A Failed Attempt at Transnational Marriage: Maternal Citizenship in a Globalizing South Korea." In Cross-Border Marriages. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9780812200645.101.

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Mendelman, Lisa. "Conclusion." In Modern Sentimentalism. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198849872.003.0006.

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The Conclusion takes up the conspicuous absence of life after marriage in the prior chapters by examining Edith Wharton’s late novel The Gods Arrive (1932), other interwar writing about marriage and maternity, and more recent media that likewise deals with these stumbling blocks for modern ideals of female independence. The Gods Arrive is both a catalog of modern love—divorce, trial marriage, companionate marriage, free love, single motherhood—and a saga of failed female authorship that enumerates how new liberties differently disempower women and preserve expectations of their affective labor, while further excluding them from alternative forms of production. The chapter concludes by exploring the endurance of modern sentimentalism in late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century writing by female authors, and argues that ironic sentimentalism continues to afford women artists a formal and structural logic for expressing the double binds of modern femininity.
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Magnarella, Paul J. "Life’s Transitions to the Black Panther Party." In Black Panther in Exile. University Press of Florida, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813066394.003.0003.

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Pete O’Neal describes his failed first marriage and his inability to adapt to a standard working-class life style. Once free from marriage he achieves his 12<sup>th</sup> Street ideal by becoming a pimp, only to experience a mental and spiritual breakdown. He commits himself to working for the black community and forms the Black Vigilantes to protect blacks from police abuse. He travels to the Black Panther Party headquarters in Oakland, California, to train and then get permission to form a branch of the Party in Kansas City. He describes the Party’s personnel, structure, and workings in Kansas. Pete marries fellow member Charlotte Hill, and years later both recollect their first meeting and how the Party saved their lives.
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Conference papers on the topic "Failed marriage"

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Keller, Scott, and David Day. "Extending the Life of F-Class Gas Turbine Rotors." In ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2018-76925.

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Unlike more mature E-Class heavy duty gas turbine rotors, F-Class gas turbine rotors have exhibited a variety of failure mechanisms over the past 20 years. From the liberation of nickel turbine posts to large (600 mm) cracks in marriage components, F-Class rotors have failed to achieve the reliability of older units. Now as the F-Class units are approaching the OEM-recommended end of life (EOL), operators are struggling to repair and/or replace as operations and maintenance (O&amp;M) budgets are dwindling. As such, end users are routinely forced to turn to other service providers to provide targeted (limited) inspections aimed at extending the life of these capital parts. While suitable for more mature rotor systems, recent EOL investigations into multiple OEM F-Class rotors have revealed significant issues with limited inspections. Utilizing comprehensive non-destructive testing (NDT), forging defects and surface cracks have been discovered throughout compressor and turbine rotors. However, inspection alone cannot determine if adequate life remains when an indication is found. In addition to the inspections, recommended analytical modeling and requisite material test data for CrMoV, NiCrMoV, and IN706 rotor materials will be overviewed. In some cases, the NDT indications have resulted in the retirement of individual components, as analytical predictions could not provide a suitable extension for those particular components. The concern is highlighted that a significant amount of these findings were in the cold end of the compressor, which would have been missed with more traditional, limited inspections. The goal of this paper is to provide the end user the information to reliably and safely extend the life of their rotor beyond the original OEM recommendation.
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Keller, Michael F. "Hybrid Nuclear Power: An Unexpected Small Reactor Approach." In ASME 2011 Small Modular Reactors Symposium. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/smr2011-6520.

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The world possess hundreds of years of economical coal reserves that are becoming increasingly unpopular due to climate-change concerns. The ability of renewable energy to supply the planet’s needs is limited. The once bright promise of American nuclear power has dimmed considerably due to the high cost of building new facilities, with the recent events in Japan creating even more uncertainties. Small nuclear reactors are now being proposed, but their limited size creates problematic competitiveness issues. Our energy options for the future are becoming progressively more limited. A completely unexpected solution lies with a hybrid gas turbine designed to cleanly produce large amounts of electrical power using two fuel sources. This recently proposed and unique U.S. technology employs a large combustion (gas) turbine in tandem with a small and efficient helium gas reactor. Relative to conventional methods, the hybrid greatly increases energy production, appreciably reduces costs while dramatically reducing emissions and solid wastes, particularly spent nuclear fuel which is also essentially worthless as bomb material. The commercial potential of the hybrid is unprecedented. The helium gas reactor marriage with the combustion turbine opens the door for the continued use of one of the worlds’ most abundant and low-cost fuel resources, coal. The hybrid-nuclear coal gasification configuration dramatically reduces environmental impacts while also supporting the co-production of all manner of liquid transportation fuels, substitute natural gas, hydrogen, process heat and industrial chemicals. Replacement of the aging fleet of US coal plants with hybrid-nuclear/coal gasification units would dramatically reduce air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions without resorting to the problematic sequestration (pumping into the ground) of CO2. Further, coal sludge waste and ponds would be eliminated. The unique characteristics of the hybrid also sustain the co-production of stored energy (compressed air) and solar power and move both of these expensive green resources into more competitive positions. The hybrid’s unique operational capabilities readily support the electrical grid, particularly the increasing variability caused by greater use of renewable energy. The use of hybrid-nuclear energy plants would significantly extend the life of the world’s fuel resources, to the benefit of future generations. The hybrid relies on tried-and-proven technologies as well as the large body of knowledge developed over the 50 year history of nuclear reactors and combustion turbines. The unique characteristics of the hybrid overcome the engineering, financial and regulatory obstacles that have long held back the full-scale commercial deployment of the gas reactor. The hybrid technology is considerably safer than current reactors. Melting of the nuclear fuel is not possible, the reactor can not cause explosions or burnup, and radiation releases to the environment are extremely unlikely. No operator actions are necessary to keep the public safe. Hybrid nuclear energy is a fail-safe and evolutionary new direction for nuclear power.
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